Thursday, August 5, 2021

THE NAME OF THE GAME IS... KILL (1968)

 



Directed By: Gunnar Hellstron  Written By: Gary Crutcher  Cinematography: Vilmos Zsigmond Editor: Lou Lombardo

Cast: Jack Lord, Susan Strasberg, Collin Wilcox Paxton, Tisha Sterling, T.C. Jones, Mort Mills, Marc Desmond 


A desert family offers a traveling stranger its hospitality, but the stranger doesn't realize exactly what they have in store for him.

This film is certainly an oddity the time had never heard of before.

The film is pretty basic in plot and relies heavily on its ending, which is meant to be shocking. So much so the film Mostly depends on it. Though offers two for one. Then leaves you with a Few questions it will never answer.

If you notice early in the film you can't predict the end. Tone. even if you miss eventually the film will become predictable but then try to still get you 

So obviously this is a film to best go in blind or knowing as little as possible to get the best bang for your buck.

This is certainly the first time I have seen star Jack Lord in anything other than the show that made him Famous HAWAII FIVE-O and here he plays a Hungarian drifter with an accent. He does a serviceable job. Though you wonder about the intelligence of his character. As many times he is attacked and almost does from these attacks. Yet he keeps coming back to this family. Yet tries to rationalize it when it appears mostly to be lust.

Even as they are all obviously off in many ways. Though the one he seems to fall for in only one day. Where they talk about their love for each other already. Seems to be the sane one and the one who just needs love in her life.  

Whereas her sister's one already has an instant distaste for him and lets it be known and the teen sister just seems disturbed as when we meet her the family mother is bringing her home after setting a cat on fire to punish someone who was picking on her. Who has she then Tripped down a set of stairs and broke their leg after killing the cat. All of this is scenes as teenage hijinks.

They all come onto him at some point in the film except the mother. As they are fetching in their own ways. Though most would have hightailed it.

The film also can't seem to settle at times it says that no tourists stop and stay in the town. Yet later the sheriff talks about how the town is torn. They hate tourists but depend on them for income. Just as this family of females run a service station that no one tourists or townsfolk ever seem to come by or use.

Not to mention it’s hard to see how or why they would stay or live in this town as it comes off almost as desolate as a ghost town.

This is definitely a movie of its time. Making it today would be too obvious. As we have become used to these kinds of twists. Though for what it’s worth even if at times it seems ridiculous. It definitely keeps your interest. 

Grade: C+


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